Encontrados 61 resultados para: sinner

  • The good bequeaths a heritage to children's children, the wealth of the sinner is stored away for the upright. (Proverbs 13, 22)

  • Wisdom, knowledge and joy, God gives to those who please him, but on the sinner he lays the task of gathering and storing up for someone else who is pleasing to him. This too is futility and chasing after the wind. (Ecclesiastes 2, 26)

  • Do not allow your mouth to make a sinner of you, and do not say to the messenger that it was a mistake. Why give God occasion to be angry with you and ruin all the work that you have done? (Ecclesiastes 5, 5)

  • And I find woman more bitter than Death, she is a snare, her heart is a net, and her arms are chains. The man who is pleasing to God eludes her, but the sinner is captured by her. (Ecclesiastes 7, 26)

  • The sinner who does wrong a hundred times lives on. But this too I know, that there is good in store for people who fear God, because they fear him, (Ecclesiastes 8, 12)

  • Yes, I have applied myself to all this and experienced all this to be so: that is to say, that the upright and the wise, with their activities, are in the hands of God. We do not understand either love or hate, where we are concerned, both of them are futile. And for all of us is reserved a common fate, for the upright and for the wicked, for the food and for the bad; whether we are ritually pure or not, whether we offer sacrifice or not: it is the same for the good and for the sinner, for someone who takes a vow, as for someone who fears to do so. (Ecclesiastes 9, 1)

  • futile. And for all of us is reserved a common fate, for the upright and for the wicked, for the good and for the bad; whether we are ritually pure or not, whether we offer sacrifice or not: it is the same for the good and for the sinner, for someone who takes a vow, as for someone who fears to do so. (Ecclesiastes 9, 2)

  • Wisdom's treasuries contain the maxims of knowledge, the sinner, however, holds piety in abhorrence. (Ecclesiasticus 1, 25)

  • Woe to faint hearts and listless hands, and to the sinner who treads two paths. (Ecclesiasticus 2, 12)

  • A stubborn heart is weighed down with troubles, the sinner heaps sin on sin. (Ecclesiasticus 3, 27)

  • Do not winnow in every wind, or walk along every by-way (as the double-talking sinner does). (Ecclesiasticus 5, 9)

  • for a bad name will earn you shame and reproach, as happens to the double-talking sinner. (Ecclesiasticus 6, 1)


“Seja modesto no olhar.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina